EVGA teased its GeForce GTX 780 Ti Classified K|ngp|n Edition graphics card some more, by posting high-resolution pictures. Designed to be the fastest single-GPU graphics card ever built, it features a non-reference PCB built from the ground up for voltage-assisted overclocking using exotic/subzero cooling solutions, although its included frosty-white cooling solution doesn't look like it will disappoint overclockers, either. There are no pictures of the business side of the PCB, but one can expect an extremely strong VRM powering the GK110 chip and 3 GB of memory. The card draws power from a combination of one 6-pin and two 8-pin PCIe connectors. One can expect EVGA regulars such as EVBot support, redundant BIOS, voltage measurement points, and clearly marked out spots for manual volt-mods, or using EVGA's EPower board. The card will also be designed with fewer but stronger screws, so it takes lesser time to rip off or attach a cooler.

Pretty much standard practice these days. IIRC, the Classified has been a wide boy since the GTX 580. Oversized cards have been in vogue for a while- The Lightning, Toxic, Matrix are all pretty wide cards. Even those that adhere to a more-or-less default 126mm (unless reference design) tend to add width via some vague shroud styling cue ( Windforce for example). The PCB on my GTX 670 is the same width as the GTX 780's, yet the overall width is 7mm wider thanks to central portion of the shroud design

No it's not you the card is some 10 to 20mm taller than the PCI-e slot bracket which is also true for the GTX 770 and GTX 780 Classified. The reason for this is to accommodated the 12 phase VRM that Evga uses on it's GPUs.